poadeleted21
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2011
- Messages
- 12,332
How stupid is this?
I rate it at 1.5....
Kinda clever idea,, but you can bet it was staged for attention
10 - the guy is flying a T-tail.
That video is at least 10 years old if not 15. I heard that the guy left dents in the trim around the sun roof from holding on so tight, but I think it is real.
Even older....1985!
It was real. I remember watching it on the news when I was a kid.
Oh, and is there any reason you can't just hit the ground hard on 2 wheels and pop the third out by the quick jolt?
How expensive is it to fix a plane after a gear up landing (I realize it varies)?
If done flawlessly, a grand or two in underbelly skin repair. If there is a prop strike, it can get quite expensive, for a new prop, engine teardown and replacement of affected engine parts.
Best to try to shut the engine down and bump the starter to get the prop in the right spot so it won't strike the ground when you land belly up!
My prop still spins after engine shutdown in the air.
You got bigger balls then me.... In 30+ years of flying I have NEVER had the guts to shut the motor off in the air...
You got bigger balls then me.... In 30+ years of flying I have NEVER had the guts to shut the motor off in the air...
I've never flown anything with retracts and don't know much about them, so I'm not sure if my opinion counts---but am I the only one who thinks this is pretty smart? I mean, the airplane is on the ground safely, nobody has to report to the insurance agency, and the guy who was out of the sunroof didn't even get an undesired haircut. Then again, this could have gone horribly wrong, but it didn't!
I've never flown anything with retracts and don't know much about them, so I'm not sure if my opinion counts---but am I the only one who thinks this is pretty smart? I mean, the airplane is on the ground safely, nobody has to report to the insurance agency, and the guy who was out of the sunroof didn't even get an undesired haircut. Then again, this could have gone horribly wrong, but it didn't!
In this situation i'd think burning all the fuel out and doing a gear up landing on a large grass field would be the best alternative.
Best to try to shut the engine down and bump the starter to get the prop in the right spot so it won't strike the ground when you land belly up!
Best to try to shut the engine down and bump the starter to get the prop in the right spot so it won't strike the ground when you land belly up!
......, I would never do this. Never.
First off, remember that your stall speed is going to be highway speed (probably breaking the speed limit) for the car. So this means you're asking someone to stand out of a sunroof with no restraint and greater than legal speeds. Bad idea. Since this maneuver has let's say 1 mile to be accomplished (probably less), there's a short amount of time to accelerate, perform maneuver, and brake hard with someone hanging out the sunroof. Worse idea. It's going to be very hard to sync up, meaning likely repeats (as they had to do), causing further danger for that part of the maneuver. See where this is going?
Now you're flying close to stall speed, about 10 ft over the ground trying to hold altitude to +/- 6" with the consequences of killing the person hanging out of the car, damaging the car, and damaging the airplane anyway if you screw up. And you're doing it blind! SAR crews can at least see what they're hovering over, but you'd have right around 0 visibility of who you're trying to not kill.
.
My first thought of potential deadly failure of this trick is if the car driver sped up too fast and ran the guy hanging out the sunroof into the prop.... Next point of failure would be the plane hitting a downdraft or just outright settling onto the car and squishing the "hero" hanging out of the sunroof....
Exactly. I couldn't live with myself for any of those risks. Nope, not doing it. I'll take the gear up.
No, it's not. Heard about a 310 that tried to do this and ended up a half mile short of the runway. Again, stupid to 11. Don't create an additional emergency to try to help the first one.
There was a King Air that did that (the engine shut down), but he was already over the runway when he shut the engines. Was caught live on the news.
That's the way to do it, if you're going to. But with 4-bladed props they still needed to be replaced, and the power turbine and gearbox would still need to be checked, although I doubt if there was any damage.
It wasn't intentional. Fuel starvation - sort of. I had 30 gallons left, it just wasn't 15 gallons on a side. Even though the fuel selector was set to both, it was only pulling from one side. So I had 0 in one tank, and 30 in the other. Took a few seconds to figure out which tank since the Piper fuel gauges suck and were bouncing all over.
I think I was with you, yes?
Best to try to shut the engine down and bump the starter to get the prop in the right spot so it won't strike the ground when you land belly up!